In cooperation with various government regulatory agencies, HP has announced an expansion of its June 2016 worldwide voluntary safety recall and replacement program for certain notebook batteries. Additional batteries are affected.

Re: evga geforce gtx 950 in hp pavilion hpe h8-1020

06-05-201607:57 AM

Hi,

There is one unknown specification for your motherboard that will prevent you from installing a PCIe x16 3.0 graphics card. The 3.0 cards are only backwards compatible with PCIe x16 2.0 slots. Your motherboard may have a PCIe x16 1.0 slot. None of the options below will work in your PC if you have PCIe x16 version 1.0.

The Radeon HD 6570, that is an option at purchase, is a PCIe x16 2.0 card. You may have a 2.0 slot. It is unclear when looking at the HP specs for your PC.

I had an HD 6570. You could not install drivers from AMD with HP's version of this card. You had to use HP drivers. It is possible that this card is not a 2.0 card even though the mainstream version is a 2.0 card. One can only guess.

MSI is rolling out hybrid Nvidia cards soon. Hav'nt seen anything tangible yet. Nvidia is slowly releasing 1000 series cards that require less power. Maybe some OEM's will also include hybrid versions that will work on your PC shortly.

The 900 series Nvidia graphics cards require UEFI BIOS.

Your PC has a legacy BIOS.

You have a 300 watt power supply. You will have to upgrade the power supply to run an AMD card and are meeting the bare minimum if you can install a Gt 640 GDDR5 card.

You may be able to install (you need a PCIe x16 2.0 slot) Nvidia 600 series cards or look at the hybrid AMD cards by Sapphire.

The AMD cards are longer and require larger power supplies.

You have to verify that you have the power and room to install either graphics card. The cards are also double slot cards. You'll have to verify you can install a double slot card. Again, you need a PCIe x16 2.0 slot on the motherboard.

Re: evga geforce gtx 950 in hp pavilion hpe h8-1020

There is one unknown specification for your motherboard that will prevent you from installing a PCIe x16 3.0 graphics card. The 3.0 cards are only backwards compatible with PCIe x16 2.0 slots. Your motherboard may have a PCIe x16 1.0 slot. None of the options below will work in your PC if you have PCIe x16 version 1.0.

The Radeon HD 6570, that is an option at purchase, is a PCIe x16 2.0 card. You may have a 2.0 slot. It is unclear when looking at the HP specs for your PC.

I had an HD 6570. You could not install drivers from AMD with HP's version of this card. You had to use HP drivers. It is possible that this card is not a 2.0 card even though the mainstream version is a 2.0 card. One can only guess.

MSI is rolling out hybrid Nvidia cards soon. Hav'nt seen anything tangible yet. Nvidia is slowly releasing 1000 series cards that require less power. Maybe some OEM's will also include hybrid versions that will work on your PC shortly.

The 900 series Nvidia graphics cards require UEFI BIOS.

Your PC has a legacy BIOS.

You have a 300 watt power supply. You will have to upgrade the power supply to run an AMD card and are meeting the bare minimum if you can install a Gt 640 GDDR5 card.

You may be able to install (you need a PCIe x16 2.0 slot) Nvidia 600 series cards or look at the hybrid AMD cards by Sapphire.

The AMD cards are longer and require larger power supplies.

You have to verify that you have the power and room to install either graphics card. The cards are also double slot cards. You'll have to verify you can install a double slot card. Again, you need a PCIe x16 2.0 slot on the motherboard.